| Ego Power, High-Beams On |
The mower has enough power to chop down dandelions and thick weeds, although it can bog down on thick grass. The discharge chute clogs somewhat easily, and it has a bag system (never tried it). Assuming you take care of your yard, it does an admiral job. And it's extremely quiet. The weedeater is a whole different animal -- in a very, very good way. I have yet to see a lack of power, and it's nowhere near as loud as a gas weedeater.
Anyways, before this turns into a review -- I started this to talk about choosing battery power over gas. A typical gas push mower run for an hour produces as much pollution as eight new cars driving 55 mph for that same amount of time. Kind of boggles the mind, eh? Now consider that I don't need to go purchase gas or oil for my mower, and store it in the garage. Or change spark plugs. I simply pop the battery on the charger. When it dies (after about 45 minutes), I just swap to my weedeater battery and finish mowing the lawn.
And on the storage -- a lawnmower usually takes up premium space in the garage, unless you have a shed. Well, since this doesn't have a fuel tank, it can fold up vertically, so that when it's stored (takes about 15 seconds to fully collapse it), it only sticks out from the wall about a foot, in about an 18" wide by about a 2 foot tall package. Try doing that with your gas mower.
It'll be amazing to see what happens as the technology improves, and more companies start making electric lawn equipment with these capabilities. In case you're interested in the brand, the only place I've found that carries them is Home Depot. I highly recommend them, but your mileage may vary.